Name: Curley Court. Named for its location within the incomplete Curley Hall residential quadrangle.
Date: Units were manufactured in 1996 and installed in 1999.
Elevation: ± 223'
Use: Residential units, each with kitchen, bath, two bedrooms and a living room, total modular. Village houses approximately 100 students and staff.
Style: Modern, utilitarian
Composition: Twenty-five modular units spaced apart as free-standing structures northwest of Curley Hall.
Size: Approximate gross square footage of each unit- 775
Materials: Exterior, vinyl siding; foundations, concrete masonry units.
Trim: Vinyl
Roof: Asphalt, gable roof.
Windows: Vinyl, double hung.
Doors: Single doors elevated several steps above grade.
Note: These are factory-manufactured, temporary units with interior sprinkler systems.
Setting: Small units are arranged in clusters and set in a lawn area between other permanent buildings in an area obviously intended to have a symmetrical north wing from Curley Hall.
Architecture: The 25 units have a utilitarian, manufactured, temporary appearance and a simple domestic character.
History: Curley Court was put in place in 1999 as temporary housing facility for students and staff.
Significance: Curley Court is a noncontributing cluster of temporary structures.
Condition: The custom-built, well maintained units, acquired from St. Anselm’s College in New Hampshire, are in good condition. Air conditioning was added to provide year-round use, and rooms were networked to the computer system and cable television services. The trailers have been approved for five more years of use, through summer 2009.
Floor Plans
Last Revised 03-Oct-05 10:52 AM.
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